Abstract
ABSTRACTProteins often contain cavities, which are usually assumed to be water-filled. Recent high-pressure NMR results indicate that the preactive conformation of the β1-adrenergic receptor (β1AR) contains completely empty cavities (dry voids) of about ∼100 Å3 volume, which disappear in the active conformation of the receptor. Here we have localized these cavities by X-ray crystallography on xenon-derivatized β1AR crystals. One of the cavities coincides with the binding pocket of cholesterol. Solution NMR data show that addition of the soluble cholesterol analog cholesteryl hemisuccinate (CHS) impedes the formation of the active conformation of the receptor by blocking conserved GPCR microswitches. This wedge-like action explains the function of the cellularly highly abundant cholesterol as a negative allosteric modulator of β1AR. The detailed understanding of GPCR regulation by cholesterol via filling of a dry void and the easy scouting for such voids by xenon may provide new routes for the development of allosteric drugs.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
3 articles.
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